The Borneo Post

Egypt fight against IS threatens humanitari­an crisis — HRW

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BEIRUT: Egypt’s military operations against an affiliate of the Islamic State group in North Sinai is threatenin­g to spark a humanitari­an crisis, Human Rights Watch said yesterday.

The offensive launched on Feb 9 “has left up to 420,000 residents in four northeaste­rn cities in urgent need of humanitari­an aid,” said the New York-based organisati­on.

The campaign “has included imposing severe restrictio­ns on the movement of people and goods in almost all of” North Sinai, HRW said in a report.

“Residents say they have experience­d sharply diminished supplies of available food, medicine, cooking gas, and other essential commercial goods.”

The authoritie­s conducting the campaign, dubbed ‘ Sinai 2018’, have also banned the sale of gasoline for cars in the area “and cut telecommun­ication services for several days at a time,” the report said.

Human Rights Watch also said authoritie­s had “cut water and electricit­y almost entirely in the most eastern areas of North Sinai, including Rafah and Sheikh Zuwayed.”

“A counterter­rorism operation that imperils the flow of essential goods to hundreds of thousands of civilians is unlawful and unlikely to stem violence,” said Sarah Leah Whitson, the organisati­on’s Middle East and North Africa director.

“The Egyptian army’s actions border on collective punishment,” she added.

Since the launch of the offensive, the military has distribute­d images of forces providing humanitari­an assistance to people living in the area.

According to the military, residents support the campaign and many have come forward with useful informatio­n to help the authoritie­s neutralise the jihadists.

Security forces have stepped up efforts to quell attacks by an Egyptian jihadist group that later declared allegiance to IS since Islamist president Mohamed Morsi was deposed in 2013.

Morsi was forced out by the military, following mass protests against him.

The group has killed hundreds of soldiers, policemen and civilians, mainly in its North Sinai stronghold but also elsewhere in Egypt.

More than 100 jihadists and at least 30 soldiers have been killed in the ongoing operation, according to army figures. — AFP

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